Communism's Pakistan
love-hate
relationship
with
Meraj Hasan December 02, 2019 https://tribune.com.pk/article/91535/communisms-love-hate-relationship-with-pakistan The communists did not support the separatist theory of dividing India into two nations on the basis of religion
A sizable amount of literature suggests that the Left supported the Pakistan Movement. However, a deeper reading into the politics of the Left in the crucial last decade of the British Raj reveals a far more complex situation. In 1936, three young communists, namely ZA Ahmad, Sajjad Zaheer and Kunwar Muhammad Ashraf, upon the alleged instructions of the Communist Party of India (CPI) [1], joined the All India Congress Committee under Nehru’s presidency. Nehru had initiated the Muslim Mass-contact Programme (MMCP) to increase the Muslim members of Congress and had placed it under KM Ashraf. He and his two comrades started the weekly Hindustan, attacking Sir Syed Ahmed Khan,[2] deriding Muslim League leaders as compradors allied with the British[3] and a club of upper-class gentlemen.[4] The MMCP, however, fizzled out before the Congress ministries resigned in 1939.[5] This was also before the Muslim League presented the famous Lahore Resolution in March 1940 which was promptly condemned by Soviet theoreticians A Dyakov and V Bushevich.[6] However, in February 1942 the General-Secretary of the CPI, Puran Chand Joshi, in his policy statement, declared it was “wrong and unrealistic” to dismiss the Muslim League as reactionary.[7] Another CPI leader, Gangadhar Adhikari in August 1942 described the communal problem as that of “growing nationalities” that could be resolved by recognising the “right to self-determination”.[8] In September, the CPI called for unity between Congress and Muslim League in a resolution.[9] Rajani Palme Dutt of the British Communist Party also reversed his earlier stand against the Muslim League by asking Congress to make “far-reaching concessions” with the League for the sake of unity.[10] K. M. Ashraf also changed tack along with Sajjad Zaheer when they, in May of 1942, supported Rajagopalachari’s resolution in All India Congress Committee (AICC) to accept Pakistan in principle.[11] Adhikari took pains to explain that the CPI had changed their stance as they recognised Muslim League’s growing potential between 1936 and 1940, invoking Stalin’s 1913 thesis on nationalities.[12] However, Shri Prakash’s article in Bipan Chandra’s “The Indian Left – Critical Appraisals” titled, “CPI and the Pakistan Movement” attributes this change of heart to two factors: Hitler’s attack on Soviet Union and the Japanese threat to British India. Both these factors forced the communists to align with the British on the war-front, to seek the league’s support alongside the British, endeavour for a national front through unity between Congress and League and finally, to reject the “Quit India” movement against the British in 1942.[13] The communists essentially reshaped the Pakistan demand to “self-determination of Muslim nationalities (i.e. Bihari, Bengali, Pathan etc)” in order to make it congruent with Stalin’s thesis, while categorically stating that they had “nothing in common with the separatist theory of dividing India into two nations on the basis of religion.”[14] Moreover, they also spoke out against “any proposal to disintegrate India” in the same resolution.